Aysha Akhtar

Aysha Akhtar

Dr. Aysha Akhtar’s Lifelong Commitment to Animal Advocacy

“It is the responsibility of scientists never to suppress knowledge, no matter how awkward that knowledge is, no matter how it may bother those in power. We are not smart enough to decide which pieces of knowledge are permissible, and which are not.” – Carl Sagan

Activism has long been an important part of Dr. Aysha Akhtar’s life. When she was a teenager she accompanied her mother and sister to protests and other animal protection events. Growing up in a family that believed in standing up for animals had a tremendous impact on Akhtar, and she appreciates that her mother—who she refers to as “the toughest little thing in animal rights”—instilled these values in her. She fondly recalls trips she took with her mother and her sister during the 1980s and 1990s. However, these were not typical family vacations. Instead, Akhtar and her family travelled up and down the east coast of the United States, getting up at the break of dawn in order to join other activists who were protesting pigeon, wild deer, and turkey hunts. She also recalls driving 16 hours round trip to and from Connecticut to attend a 2-hour animal protection demonstration. Akhtar describes her mother as having “the kindest heart I know toward anyone who is suffering,” and recalls one particular incident when her family was protesting a pigeon shoot, a scene of “pure violence and cruelty.” There were many who had gathered to protest the hunt, but there were also locals gathered to heckle the protesters. Tempers flared and at one point a man pulled a knife on her mother. Akhtar remembers her mother calmly saying, “go ahead, I dare you.” Witnessing her mother’s “tremendous courage,” in particular when she was standing up for someone innocent and vulnerable, had a profound impact on her.

Akhtar also credits a special dog named Sylvester for helping to develop her love of animals. Sylvester was her grandparents’ dog, the first animal she ever bonded with, and because of Sylvester she began to pay closer attention to other animals she encountered. As she recalls,

Through Sylvester, I became more aware of all the animals around me. As a kid I tried to become friends with and started to try to help so many critters around me. I took in orphaned birds and tried to rehabilitate them. I fed what I thought at the time were stray cats (but it turned out they were our neighbor’s cats who just happened to find a good deal at our place!). I learned to love animals.

Sylvester was a special friend and teacher, and he helped Akhtar through a traumatic time in her childhood. Akhtar finds that the lessons Sylvester taught her remain with her to the present day. (In fact, she is currently working on a book about the relationships and connections people have with animals and how those relationships impact our wellbeing, and Sylvester figures prominently in it.) She finds animals to be “great company” and is especially intrigued by the many ways in which they are so different from humans.

… what makes them so great is not just how they are so like us, but how they are so unlike us in so many ways. Their differences are what makes them so much fun to be around. This world would be so boring if it was only populated with humans. Whenever I was in the company of an animal, I learned to see the world differently. I saw the world through his or her eyes and it opened up my experiences with the world around me.

This sense of compassion for and curiosity about other animals has stayed with her throughout her life. Her experience with the suffering of animals greatly influenced her decision to become a doctor and her desire to alleviate all suffering.

Animal advocacy was a way of life when Akhtar was growing up, and it remains just as important to her today. Her friend, Dr. Alka Chandna, Senior Laboratory Oversight Specialist for PETA, believes that Akhtar is “just as passionate today as she was when she was a young girl.” Dr. Akhtar is now a neurologist and public health specialist who has made it her mission to explore and explain the connections that exist between human health and the wellbeing of animals. Her commitment to animal advocacy remains an important aspect of both her personal and professional life. “Aysha brings her extensive training and smarts to her advocacy,” Chandna stresses, “she has that rare gift of being able to master mind-bogglingly detailed and technical scientific concepts and present them to the public in an accessible, engaging, and even entertaining way.”

Through her love of science Akhtar became acquainted with Carl Sagan’s writings, and she quickly became a big fan, reading all she could get her hands on. The only time she ever skipped school was to attend one of Sagan’s lectures! Akhtar especially admires that Sagan had both a “curiosity about the world around us” and a sense of dedication “to using his curiosity to do good things.” She respects how Sagan did not shy away from taking an unpopular or controversial position if it meant speaking up about something he believed in.

Like Sagan, Akhtar is not afraid to speak out against the status quo on issues she feels are important. For instance, she strongly believes that in order to improve the health and welfare of humans it is essential that the wellbeing of animals also be taken seriously and greatly improved. For Akhtar the two issues are deeply connected, and her work is an important counter to suggestions that those who care about how animals are treated are somehow less concerned about human health. She has repeatedly demonstrated that the ways in which animals are treated have profound implications for public health concerns, and that much more attention needs to be paid to this connection.

When she was in medical school Akhtar noticed that there was no discussion in her classes about how the wellbeing of animals could be connected to major public health concerns, and that the focus tended to be more on treatment and less on preventing the issues in the first place. For example, she would learn about an infectious disease like SARS or the increase in heart disease in the United States, but was left asking questions about their root causes, causes that she was learning could frequently be linked back to broader systemic issues relating to the treatment of animals. She remembers being “increasingly frustrated” by these gaps in her education and became compelled to dig deeper in to the connections between human and animal health. As she notes, “if the people with power are going to ignore these connections, well, then I had to raise the issues.”

Today, through her writings and public talks, Akhtar demonstrates the range of ways in which the health and wellbeing of humans and animals are linked. For instance, she points to the ways in which viruses and infectious diseases can be associated with the cramped and unsanitary conditions that most animals who are raised for food in the 21st century live in. She also underscores that fluctuating weather patterns attributed to climate change can create health and safety risks for humans (e.g.: flooding, drought, scarcity of resources), and that industrial or “factory farming” practices are a leading contributor of climate change. On a related point, she notes that many humans put their lives in jeopardy when they refuse to evacuate an area hit by a natural disaster unless they are permitted to take their companion animals with them. In the realm of entertainment, there are numerous examples of animals in captivity harming those humans they are in closest contact with. The same is true with animals who are at the centre of the “exotic” pet trade. On the more positive side of the equation, Akhtar points to the many health benefits that are associated with sharing our lives with companion animals. Research has pointed to the ways in which having this kind of positive relationship with animals can help with things like stress and high blood pressure.

Animal experimentation is perhaps the most contentious arena in which human and animal health overlap. In this context, human health concerns are quite often pitted against the wellbeing of the animals who are tested upon—the issue is presented as a zero-sum game as if it is always necessary for either humans or animals to suffer. Akhtar’s work in this area presents an important alternative narrative. While she acknowledges that simply due to the sheer number of experiments being performed, we will learn some things from vivisection, she argues that animal experimentation is not as beneficial to human health as it is often touted to be and is, on the whole, counter to human health. She argues that animal experiments are largely ineffective because we can’t rely on them to predict human outcomes due to inter-species differences in physiology. The questions we should be asking, according to Akhtar, are: “is animal experimentation the most useful and most effective way to get information today? Do animal experiments accurately predict what we are going to find in humans?” Akhtar’s work in this area demonstrates that the answer to both of these questions is a resounding “no.” For example, she points to the fact that most drugs that pass pre-clinical trials (in which animal testing plays a large part) end up being ineffective and often downright unsafe for humans.

There are, therefore, many ways in which important human health concerns are clearly related to the welfare and wellbeing of animals. However, in spite of this growing recognition the changes in policies and approaches necessary to address these concerns have been slow to arrive. One of the few contexts in which Akhtar feels that connections between human and animal wellbeing has started to be taken seriously is in instances of domestic abuse. The recognition that victims of domestic violence may choose to stay in a dangerous situation because they can not face leaving their companion animals behind has led to a rethinking of guidelines and regulations for shelters in many communities. It is becoming increasingly common for domestic violence shelters to allow people to bring their companion animals with them when seeking refuge from an abusive situation.

Akhtar is encouraged by a growing interest in the connections between human and animal health among students wanting to work in public health. She has been contacted by many of them who want to know more about her work, and she attributes this to the fact that “younger generations are growing up in a world where concern for animals is a legitimate social issue and they are so excited to break free of old paradigms that view the welfare of humans and animals as separate.” She is optimistic about this shift because she knows that this next generation of public health practitioners will eventually enact the changes on this front that are so desperately needed.

Akhtar takes what she describes as a “friendly approach” when discussing these issues. She recognizes that when people start thinking about the many different ways that human health is positively or negatively impacted by animal welfare they may feel overwhelmed or defensive. She has found that the best strategy for combating this is to demonstrate to her audience that she understands these feelings, that in spite of her groundbreaking work in this area she is not that different from everyone else. As she notes, “I used to not think about these issues. I used to eat animals and yet, I loved my cats. I used to think animal experiments were necessary for human health. I was like everyone else.” This approach has helped to break down defenses and to create situations where people are more willing to hear her out, to think critically about these important connections between human health and the wellbeing of the animals we share the planet with.

When asked who she would nominate to be featured in The Unbound Project, Akhtar mentioned her sister Jabeen who spends a lot of her time volunteering with shelters that help homeless animals, doing such underappreciated tasks as cleaning out cat litter boxes. “She does not do it for attention,” Akhtar stresses, “she does it simply because it is work that helps homeless cats.” She also nominated the brave women who help shed light on animal cruelty through undercover investigations.

I truly cannot express my gratitude for their work. Without them, the abuses would never come to light. And, I cannot imagine how horrible and gut-wrenching it must be for these women to witness these abuses. I often wonder how many of them… have suffered PTSD as a result of this type of work. That is real sacrifice.

Akhtar admires “people with guts” and “folks who go against the tide, even if it means public humiliation or disdain from their friends or colleagues.” She believes that it is these people “who change history.” When asked what advice she has for young women aspiring to do the work that she does, Akhtar emphasized the need to be open to learning new things, to be willing to take chances, and to not be afraid to step outside of your “comfort zone.”

I have had to repeatedly go out of my comfort zone to do things that I did not want to do. I hated public speaking–as a child I had a learning disability in speaking and went to special ed classes for this. But because I so care about being effective in my work, I studied hard. I practiced public speaking again and again and studied the best speakers out there, past and present. I’m not saying I nailed public speaking by any means, but I have much more confidence to do it now. And I continue to practice and study to get better with time. I am constantly trying to improve myself—to be as effective as I can.

Akhtar also notes the importance of being true to oneself. For a number of years she downplayed her animal advocacy even though it is an important aspect of both her professional and personal life. A few years ago she decided to “come out” about this, to be proud and upfront about the fact that she is a doctor who “gives a damn about human suffering and gives a damn about animal suffering!” She urges anyone who feels compassion for animals to do the same, to speak out and to be true to themselves—“concern for anyone who suffers—human or non-human is not only okay, it’s right.” Akhtar is happy to speak with students and young people who are seeking advice on how to blend their concern for both human and animal health in their careers. She can be reached at aa@ayshaakhtar.com.


Dr. Akhtar is a Fellow of the Oxford Centre for Animal Ethics and works for the Office of Counterterrorism and Emerging Threats of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). She serves as Lieutenant Commander in the US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps to protect the public from public health threats. You can learn more about her work on her website.

As she works for the U.S. government, Dr. Akhtar has provided the following obligatory disclaimer: “The opinions expressed here are those of Dr. Akhtar and do not represent the official position of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration or the U.S. government.”

Piia Anttonen

Piia Anttonen

Piia Anttonen is the Director of Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary in Finland

Piia Anttonen is the Director of Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary in Finland, an organization that cares for and provides “forever homes” for many different kinds of animals.

Anttonen is driven to help animals in need, and traces this back to a particular visit to a horse auction a year before founding Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary. On that day she was looking to buy a companion for her horse and went to see two different horses–a beautiful white horse and an older, somewhat scruffier horse who was being totally neglected by potential buyers. She decided she wanted to buy the white horse, but by the time she had made this decision another buyer had already purchased him. She left that auction without a horse, but later realized the “huge mistake” she had made. “I was angry at myself for being so stubborn,” she recalls, “How could I have been so stupid? Of course I should have taken the horse that nobody wanted! After this realization I saw animals in a very different way.”   This incident left her reflecting upon how we choose to treat certain animals, and she decided that from that moment forward she would do what she could to help the animals most in need, the elderly, the sick, the abused, and the neglected.

In recognition of her work with Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary Anttonen recently received the Topelius Prize for Animal Protection from the Helsinki Humane Society as well as an award for animal protection from the Finnish Federation for Animal Welfare Associations.

Anttonen feels that one of the hardest things about running a sanctuary is saying “no” to the constant requests to take in more animals. She finds it heartbreaking to not be able to take in every animal in need, but knows how important it is to not let the sanctuary get overcrowded. She is dedicated to ensuring that she is not overwhelmed and is able to give enough attention to the animals already living at Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary. She is working on developing a foster and rehoming program so that she can help more animals in need.

Taking care of the property and caring for all of the animals who live there is a lot of work, but Anttonen is grateful for the assistance of her parents and for the many volunteers who help out.

Piia Anttonen

Piia Anttonen and her first dog Miki looking out at Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary.

In addition, Anttonen is also dedicated to humane education and promoting a vegan lifestyle. She is very well-spoken and, as one of the volunteers at Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary said about her, “She’s very effective in promoting veganism. She has found a good balance in speaking about it, connecting people, food, ethics, and cruelty without being preachy. This is one of her strengths, and her message and facts are clear.”

Anttonen started Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary in 2012 after being inspired by a similar farmed animal sanctuary in Canada. Since Tuulispää was founded dozens of animals have found peace, safety, and sanctuary here. In this beautiful location in the Finnish countryside horses, cows, sheep, goats, ducks, hens, roosters, rabbits, guinea pigs, dogs, and cats peacefully co-exist. At Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary many different kinds of animals live together in the same spaces–the horses, goats, cows, sheep, and pigs are in the same enclosure and can choose their own social groups, sometimes making friends with animals from another species. It sometimes get tricky at feeding time–the goats have figured out that they can go right under the bellies of the horses in order to steal their food!–but overall the animals are happy living with one another.

Anttonen has also rescued Otto the fox, who was found wandering around a nearby farm looking for food. He appeared to have escaped from a fur farm because he had injuries consistent with those often found on animals raised in these kinds of places. Otto now lives at Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary but is still a “typical fox” and wary of most humans. Anttonen has been doing “clicker training” with Otto so that she is now able to trim his nails and give him medicine.

One of Anttonen’s dreams for Tuulispää Animal Sanctuary is to build a museum and educational centre that outlines the history and chronology of Finnish animal rights campaigns. She envisions that this would include interactive displays and would focus on topics like fur farming, meat, dairy, and egg production, as well as animal testing. She would also like to have camps for children, where they could come and spend time at the sanctuary and get to know the animals who live there as individuals.


Tuulispää is located in Somero in Southern Finland. Group visits are available by appointment, and open doors events are organized regularly in the summer and occasionally at other times of the year.
If you are interesting in learning more about Tuulispää or volunteering at the sanctuary, please contact Piia Anttonen at +358 (0) 45 672 1503 or info@tuulispaa.org. 

Ledaiki Ann Nailateni

Ledaiki Ann Nailateni

“When a Woman is Educated, She Looks Beyond Her Nose and She Can See Far”

 

Ledaiki Ann Nailantei

Ledaiki Ann Nailateni is one of only a few Maasai women working with the Kenya Wildlife Service and we recently interviewed her about her commitment to protecting the wildlife of Kenya from poaching.

Ann exudes warmth and happiness about life. When she was given the opportunity to go to school, she took it, and has never looked back. She is fuelled by her passions and her gratitude for the opportunities she was given as a young orphaned girl. In return for her good fortune, she wants to, and does, give back to others.

Unbound Project: Can you tell us a bit about the Kenya Wildlife Service and the training you had with them?

Ledaiki Ann Nailateni: I joined the training last year and in this training I learned how to use a gun and how to be near animals. They wanted good things from us, because of the problems of poaching in Kenya. There were only two girls and fourteen boys chosen to be part of this training from our Maasai community, so I was among the luckiest out of 600 girls who had wanted to be part of the Kenya Wildlife Service.

The organization started to help me in 2009. They took me, first of all, an orphan girl, the last one born in the family. I had a passion of going back to school, and I came here and graduated high school. I joined college and did a certificate in Conservation Wildlife and management. I really appreciate the help of Mia MacDonald (co-founder of the East African Young Women’s Leadership Initiative and Brighter Green, who will also feature in the Unbound Project) as she is the one who made me love animals. Mia said to me, “why can’t a woman do this?” And she was right – I thought, “Why not me?”

U.P.: Who are the people that inspire you?

L.A.N.: In Africa, women are not often seen as useful to the community. So women like Wangari Maathai, who started the Green Belt Movement, are really inspiring to me. I really love her so much because she fought so hard for the environment. As women, maybe our voice will not be heard as much as the man’s voice, but I am following her — the cutting of trees, I can’t allow that; the clearing of animals, I can’t allow that.

U.P.: What is the greatest threat to wildlife in Kenya, and what is being done about it?

L.A.N.: The greatest threat is poaching. People are using new technology to poach nowadays. They use some funny machines to silence their guns, so you can’t get them. But in Kenya they are really trying to improve things, like they are putting cameras everywhere. And in South Africa they are training more soldiers.

And the other problem is industrialization. Like right now they’re building a bypass through Nairobi National Park. That takes a lot of space, so a lot of animals need to be moved, a lot of animals may die. Also, here in Nairobi National Park there’s air pollution, because it’s at the centre of the city, the animals are really suffering.

U.P. What’s your relationship like with the animals in the park?

L.A.N.: The animals are my friends. The people come from far and want to see the animals, so I have to conserve them. And second thing, I get paid a salary as a soldier–visitors come, pay the conservation fee. I have to go to school with the money I earn, I have to pay for my house and to eat and to get dressed. So the animals give me employment.

U.P.: Has your relationship with animals changed since working here? Do you see them differently before than you do now?

L.A.N.: Yeah, when I first started I could not go near a lion, but now I can. But, in some ways, things have not changed that much because I come from a Maasai community and we live with the animals, the wild and domestic.

Working with the animals gives me courage. Before I could not work at night because I used to think that night shifts were “a man’s job.” But in the training, you’re taken into the field and you spend ten good days alone, one person maybe a kilometre away, so you learn to listen to the jungle. This experience makes me feel that I can stand on my own. I don’t need a man to say it, I can be heard.

U.P.: Your relationship with animals now must be very different than the traditional Maasai relationship with animals. Is this conflicting for you?

L.A.N.: No because I can address my own community. To address another tribe or another community is very hard. I can talk to members of my community about the animals and the advantages of caring for the animals and for the environment. Animals need the community and the community needs them.

U.P: What is the most memorable moment you have had in the park with the animals?

L.A.N.: During night patrols we make a small hole in the ground and hide overnight. One night during my training it was my turn to be on patrol, so I had to spend the night in the hole I had made. At one point in the night a warthog was being chased by a hyena, and the warthog came and jumped in the hole with me for safety. [laughing] I was so startled that I screamed, and then the warthog jumped out and the hyena ran away because it heard my voice. I really enjoyed it. It was the best thing ever!

U.P: What do you think is the future of wildlife in Kenya?

L.A.N.: The future is still good because many people are coming out and fighting for the rights of the animals. Right now, the animals who are indigenous are the ones who are in biggest danger now, especially the rhino. This is because many people kill rhino just for their horn. But things are getting a bit better — as conservationists, we’re working on it. I still have hope, and my hope will not die.

U.P.: What are your dreams and aspirations?

L.A.N.: My dream is to become a hero for the Maasai community. I want people to listen to me when I tell them to conserve the animals and I want to see the animals be conserved. I want my great, great, great, great, great grandchildren to be able to see rhinos.

The second thing is I want is to study, so much. I want to become like Waangari Mathai, to be known everywhere. In fact, I want to win a Nobel Prize too. And also, I want to be the voice of women in Maasai community. You know, people are being circumcised, being married young. I want to help those women and I want to see them like me now. I want those who are in darkness to come to the light and know the goodness of being educated and know about what is going on.

U.P.: What do you think is the role of women, especially young women like yourself, in helping to protect animals and their habitat?

L.A.N.: The role of a woman in any community is really big. When a woman is educated, she looks beyond her nose and she can see far. In my experience, a woman will often take action more than a man because she has more interest in issues of others.

U.P. Can you tell us what it is like being out here every day?

L.A.N.: I learn many different things from different people. Being here in Nairobi National Park is really enjoyable, and I really appreciate the environment and the animals around me. At night you can’t sleep because of the lions “RAAAR” [laughing], so you really enjoy it. I was suffering before, before the training, but now I can stand for myself. I am really happy. And I have a passion for animals and the environment.

U.P.: Which animals do you feel most connected to, and which the least?

L.A.N.: I feel connected to all of the animals here, because I work with all animals, I see all of the animals. Though I fear buffalo, I can still work with them. So, all animals are important to me. But I have to say, I don’t like the poachers. Poachers don’t only harm the animals, they also cut down the trees. You know, everyone has their own passion. Mine is the environment.

U.P.: Did it take you a while to find that passion or was it always in you?

L.A.N.: It was just in me. When I was young in my home I always loved to plant flowers. You know, we start caring when we are born.

U.P.: Is there anything you want to talk about that we haven’t asked you?

L.A.N.: I thank the East African Young Women’s Leadership Initiative for bringing me up, because without them I could be a grandmother now with ten kids [laughing]. I have a good job and I have to stand on my own. I also want to help others who come from similar backgrounds. I want to help the Maasai girls, to help them escape them from early marriages, circumcision, early pregnancy.

U.P.: Is there anything you want to say to the world, anything you want to say to youth, about taking care of animals?

L.A.N: I want to say to the youth, planting one tree is like saving the lives of ten people. We need to do this, because we, the young people, we are the ones who need this now, not the old people. So as youth, let’s conserve the environment, let’s stop poaching, let’s stop cutting down trees.

Ledaiki Ann Nailantei